Theodore Dreiser and the Cultures of Travel examines Dreiser’s three published travel narratives, A Traveler at Forty (1913), A Hoosier Holiday (1916), and Dreiser Looks at Russia (1928), along with his 1916–26 travel diaries for trips to Georgia, New Jersey, California, and Florida, and his impressions of his early days as a journalist in New York, captured in Newspaper Days (1922, 1931) and early essays collected in The Color of a Great City (1923). This book is the first sustained analysis of travel narratives from one of the most important US writers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Dreiser’s fiction is often read in relation to the themes of literary naturalism for which he is best known—such as labor, class struggle, consumer culture, and sexuality—and these travel narratives address these themes while drawing our attention to additional issues informing his work, such as tourist culture, immigration, visual culture, and concerns about US progress. The book not only enhances scholars’ understanding of Dreiser’s narrative style but also provides new insights into how his perspective on American culture at the turn of the twentieth century was informed by his travel experiences and mobility.
This book is the first sustained analysis of travel narratives from one of the most important US writers of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Introduction: Theodore Dreiser and the Cultures of Travel
Chapter 1 Walking in the City: Mobility and Dreisers Cultural Vision
Chapter 2 Travel, Tourism, and Cultural Vision in Dreisers A Travel at
Forty
Chapter 3 Visual and Tourist Culture in Dreisers A Hoosier Holiday and
Russian Travel
Writing
Chapter 4 Body, Text, and Travel in Dreisers American Diaries and A
Hoosier Holiday
Chapter 5 Dreisers American Diaries, Promotional Discourse, and Floridas
New Frontier
Epilogue
Gary Totten is Professor of English at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and Editor-in-Chief of the journal MELUS: Multi-Ethnic Literature of the United States. He is the author of African American Travel Narratives from Abroad: Mobility and Cultural Work in the Age of Jim Crow (2015), coeditor of Politics, Identity, and Mobility in Travel Writing (2015), and editor of Memorial Boxes and Guarded Interiors: Edith Wharton and Material Culture (2007).